Liberty and advocacy in Ennodius of Pavia: the significance of rhetorical education in late antique Italy

Barnish, S. J. B.

(2003)

Barnish, S. J. B. (2003) Liberty and advocacy in Ennodius of Pavia: the significance of rhetorical education in late antique Italy
In: Hommages a Carl Deroux -V: Christianisme et Moyen Age Néo-latin et surviance de la latinité. Editions Latomus, Brussels, pp. .

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Abstract

Starting from two declamations by Ennodius of Pavia, the survival and status of rhetoric and law in fifth century Italy are assessed.

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This version's date is: 2003
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Item TypeBook Item
TitleLiberty and advocacy in Ennodius of Pavia: the significance of rhetorical education in late antique Italy
AuthorsBarnish, S. J. B.
Uncontrolled KeywordsEnnodius of Pavia, liberty, advocacy, rhetoric, Roman law, Italy, 5th century
DepartmentsFaculty of History and Social Science\History

Identifiers

Deposited by () on 23-Dec-2009 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 19-May-2010

References

1. ENNODIUS, Opera, 85, 9; 94, 8; in this article, the works are numbered as in F. VOGEL'S edition, MGH AA, XII.
2. ENNOD., 3, 3.
3. Cf. R. KASTER, Guardians of Language: the Grammarian and Society in Late Antiquity, Berkeley & Los Angeles, 1988, p.109f.;
4. ENNOD., 208, 29; cf. ILS, 827: Theoderic as custos libertatis.
5. Cf. CASSIODORUS, Variae, IX, 21.
6. ENNOD., 251, 11;
8. On Ennodius' relations with Deuterius' school, see P. RICH, Education and Culture in the Barbarian West. Translated from the French by J. CONTRENI, Columbia, 1976, p.24ff.
9. For libertas in Ostrogothic official discourse, see especially, index references, s.v., in TH. MOMMSEN'S edition of the Variae, MGH, AA, XII; also ILS, 825 and 827. For BOETHIUS, see De Consolatione Philosophiae, I, prose iv. For Justinian, see CJ I, 27, 1; ILS, 832. For Vigilius, see ARATOR, Ep. ad Vigilium. For Phocas, see ILS, 837. In general, see J. MOORHEAD, Libertas and Nomen Romanum in Ostrogothic Italy, in Latomus 46, 1987, p.161-8.
10. Cf. G. WOOLF, Becoming Roman: the Origins of Provincial Civilization in Gaul, Cambridge, 1998, p.54-76.
11. CICERO, Pro Caelio, 24; 26.
12. VELLEIUS PATERCULUS, cxvii, 3 - cxviii, 1; cf. TACITUS, Annales, XI, 19, 3, on Corbulo and the Frisii.
13. AGATHIAS, The Histories, IV, 1, 8, tr. J. FRENDO, Berlin & New York, 1975.
14. Variae IV, 33, 1.
15. Variae, IX, 2, 5;
16. ENNOD., 380, 4.
17. Variae, III, 17.
18. Reg. Ep. (P. EWALD & M. HARTMANN, MGH, EPP., II), XI, 4, XIII, 34.
19. PRISCUS, fr. xi, 2, lines 407-510 (R. BLOCKLEY).
20. ENNOD., 3, 4.
21. J.A. CROOK, Legal Advocacy in the Roman World, London, 1995, p.196f. M. WINTERBOTTOM, Schoolroom and Courtroom, in B. VICKERS, Rhetoric Revalued, Binghampton NY, 1982, p.57-70. On late Roman advocacy, see J.D. HARRIES, Law and Empire in Late Antiquity, Cambridge, 1999, esp. p.107-110.
22. The Spirit of the Laws. Translated from the French by A. COHLER, B. MILLER, & H. STONE, Cambridge, 1989, p.75.
23. ENNOD., 452, 12.
24. ENNOD., 222, 7; 223, 5.
25. ENNOD., 263, 76f. Cf. 251, 7-10: 26. Variae, III, 17. 27. Variae, III, 46, 2.
28. BOETHIUS, C.Ph., I, prose iv.
31. W. POHL, Social Language, Identities, and the Control of Discourse, in E. CHRYSOS & I. WOOD, East and West: Modes of Communication, Leiden, 1999, p.134.
32. See L. WALLACH, Alcuin and Charlemagne, Ithaca & New York, 1959, ch.5, esp. p.79f. 33. VALENTINIAN III, Novellae, 2, 2; 32, 6.
34. P. HEATHER, Literacy and Power in the Migration Period, in A. BOWMAN & G. WOOLF, Literacy and Power in the Ancient World, Cambridge, 1994, p.196.
35. Variae, VII, 11.
36. CASSIOD., Inst. II, praef.4, ii, 1, 3-6; cf. I, praef.1.
37. Variae, V, 4, 6; VIII, 19, 5.
38. ENNOD., 175, 3.
39. ENNOD., 3, 1; Variae, VIII, 10, 11; ILS, 825.
40. Variae, VII, 3, 1; PROCOP., Wars, V, viii, 22-42.
41. Variae, VIII, 12.
42. This is suggested by ENNOD., 71, 4; 186; 194; cf. VOGEL, in his edition, p.x. A.H.M. JONES, The Later Roman Empire, Oxford, 1966, n.99 to p.911.
43. Variae, X, 33, 3; cf. XII, 5, 6.
44. SIDONIUS, Ep. I, 9, 2.
45. Variae, IX, 23, 3; 25, 9; XI, 1, 16; cf. III, 52, 1-2, VIII, 21, 6-7.
47. Variae, VIII, 12, 3.
48. ENNOD., 380.
49. S. KENNELL, Magnus Felix Ennodius, a Gentleman of the Church, Ann Arbor, 2000, p.72-80, 152-63,
50. ENNOD., 80, 164-7 (Gundobad); 80, 89f. (Euric)
51. Cf. KENNELL, Magnus Felix Ennodius, ch.5.
52. Variae, VIII, 16, 4; cf. 17, 6.
53. Variae, VIII, 12, 2.
54. ARATOR, Ep. ad Parthenium, 19-27.
55. ENNOD., 94, 6; 228, 2.
56. ENNOD., 69, 4, 9.
57. SIDONIUS, Ep. VIII, 8, 2; ENNODIUS, 69, 12. KENNELL, Magnus Felix Ennodius, p.53, 58, 138.
58. Variae, VIII, 19, 6.
59. PROCOP., Wars, VI, xii, 27f., 34f.
60. ROTHARI, Edictus, 359, 366.
61. KENNELL, Magnus Felix Ennodius, p.44-7, 92-6, 150, 152-67, ch.5.
62. ENNOD., 452, 4-9. KENNELL, Magnus Felix Ennodius, p.45f., 52, 123, n.193; p.163f.
63. Variae, VIII, 19, 3.
64. Reg.Ep., XI, 4.


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